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It's 1946, and as Juliet Ashton sits at her desk in her Chelsea flat, she is stumped. A writer of witty newspaper columns during the war, she can't think of what to write next. Out of the blue, she receives a letter from one Dawsey Adams of Guernsey - by chance he's acquired a book Juliet once owned - and, emboldened by their mutual love of books, they begin a correspondence. Dawsey is a member of the Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society, and it's not long before the rest of the members write to Juliet - including the gawky Isola, who makes home-made potions, Eben, the fisherman who loves Shakespeare, and Will Thisbee, rag-and-bone man and chef of the famous potato peel pie. As letters fly back and forth, Juliet comes to know the extraordinary personalities of the Society and their lives under the German occupation of the island. Entranced by their stories, Juliet decides to visit the island to meet them properly - and unwittingly turns her life upside down.

A moving tale of post-war friendship, love and books, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is gloriously honest, sweet and funny - a book to fall in love with.

This little book is the subject of quite a lot of attention at the moment, and I am going to join the chorus and say that it definitely deserves it!

I must confess that the first few times I saw this mentioned on blogs I completely skipped over it simply because, to me, the title suggested something very different from what it is actually is.

Julia Lambert has spent most of WWII writing witty newspaper columns under the name Izzy Bickerstaff, doing her part in keeping the spirits of Londoners up during the dark days of the Blitz. Now that the war is over, Julia wants to do something different. She doesn't want to be Izzy anymore but she doesn't know what she does want to write.

One day she receives a letter from one Dawsey Adams, who lives in Guernsey. He has found a book by Charles Lamb that used to be owned by Julia and he has written to her in the hope that she may be able to assist him in finding more books by that author. In his letter, Dawsey mentions that he is a member of the Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Pie Society, and Julia's interest is captured. What is the Society? Where did the name come from and how did it start?

What starts as a simple correspondence about an author grows into a series of letters between not only Dawsey and Julia, but also several of the other islanders (some are members of the Society but others are not) and Julia, and soon she begins to feel as though these people are her friends. They also begin to tell her of how life was on the island during the German occupation which no other part of the British Isles experienced.

Soon Julia finds herself wanting to go to Guernsey to meet the people she has come to know. It doesn't take long before she is caught up in island life, and her life is further woven into the lives of her friends than she could ever have imagined she would be at the beginning of the book.

The characters are fun with lots of quirkiness, but there is a depth that is captured as well - the losses that they suffered, the separation from the children that were sent to the UK for their on safety, the hunger, the fear left from living under oppression.

The whole book is told in the format of letters, telegrams and notes between the characters. When I started I really wasn't sure if that format would work for me, or if it would become a bit annoying by the end of the book, but the author(s) really did well at making the story flow within the limitations that this format necessarily gives to the structure of the novel .

I have been trying to think of a book to compare to this one, but I am really struggling. It is funny and charming, poignant, informative and there are probably numerous other descriptions I could use, but at its heart it is a really lovely story. The fact that I too wanted to go to Guernsey after finishing the book means that the characters not only captured Julia's heart, but also mine as a reader!

Just a couple of other thoughts on the cover and author. The covers for the Australian book is just so plain that if I had not heard of this book already I would never have even picked it up. It is interesting that in other places around the world, the author is given is Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows, but here it is just Mary Ann Shaffer. There is a note in the back that explains that after submitting the original manuscript, Mary Ann Shaffer became ill, and so her niece Annie Barrows completed the book. Unfortunately Mary Ann Shaffer died before seeing her book published, which is both a shame for her, and for us as readers because her book is a lovely read and it would have been interesting to see if she could have followed it up with another great read.

I totally recommend this book to anyone, and ending up giving it the highest possible grade - 5/5 for this one!

Last edited by diamondlil on Tue August 26th, 2008, 10:15 am, edited 1 time in total.

Three weeks ago, a tiny little novel with a cute title - The Guernsey Literary & Potato Peel Pie Society - started storming the best-seller lists, and, driven largely by word of mouth and a sweet backstory, it now has over 200,000 copies in print. (That's a lot.) The novel, which follows the WWII-era exploits of a Nazi-foiling book club, was begun by Mary Ann Shaffer but finished by her niece, Anne Barrows, after Shaffer got sick (she died in Februrary). And now, EW has exclusively learned, movie rights have been snapped up by an unusual partnership: Hollywood producer Paula Mazur (Nim's Island) and Florida bookstore owner Mitchell Kaplan. "The story is about [a book club], so it's nice to keep the movie within the family of booksellers,' Barrows says. "I hope Mary Ann is up there watching all this, and taking pleasure in it." - Gregory Kirschling

I can kind of see the sections set on Guernsey working as a film.It will be interesting to see how they deal with the letters and telegrams etc. Maybe they will just leave that format out of the story all together.

Ok, so armed with my 30% off coupon, I went to the bookstore. Got the book and immediately say the big blurb by Eliz Gilbert. I almost tossed the book aside (her Eat Pray Love was one of the worst books I had the displeasure to read). But egged on by you good folk, I sat down with some tea and started to read. Ok, its good, so far. Reminds me a great deal of Helen Hanffs books, which is a good thing. So Im there. Are we still reading this one for October? (or was it Sept?)

Well I guess Eliz Gilbert was right (but then even a clock is right twice a day....sorry I really really liked this book! I was a little concerned in the beginning because I did think it was swaying towards the very charming and twee category, but the second half blew that away. Very well written, excellent characterization. Its certainly not for everyone - I have a dear friend who doesn't like 'letter' books (I can't think of the word for that) - but if you want some good HF about the Nazi occupation of the Channel Islands, this is the place to get it, all within the memories and stories of the people who lived there. I did have a quibble about the time span between some of the letters: a day between London and Guernsey? (and they weren't telegrams, as she noted those). But I could let that one stand. What happens to the narrator is predictable, but it really wasn't about her, which is why I ultimately liked it.